It has become de rigueur in the West (and, therefore, here as well) to begin any discussion of post-October 7 Gaza by condemning Hamas and supporting Israel’s right to defend itself. I found Haidar’s talk, and his book, refreshing because it avoids this liberal pothole. Haidar reminds us that history did not begin on October 7; that not condemning Hamas is not equal to defending them; that Israel is a settler-colonial, apartheid state; that the Palestinian freedom struggle has had several strands, from the communists on one end to the Islamic parties (including Hamas) on the other; that the Palestine Liberation Organisation (PLO), under Yasser Arafat, surrendered to imperialism in the early 1990s, resulting in the creation of Bantustans while chasing the chimera of the “two-state solution”. The only just outcome, he argues, is a one-state solution, a secular, democratic state where all citizens—Jews, Arabs, Christians, Muslims, and others—enjoy equal rights and freedom of movement.